&bullet; You may search using specific matches to numbers or text, or you may indicate a range. For example, enter "100-115" to search for all gene IDs 100 through 115 inclusive.

&bullet; You may also enter multiple words, numbers or terms separated by spaces (or semicolons or commas), and all of your terms will be searched for if you are using the OR option.

&bullet; If you are using the AND option, then all of your search criteria must be met.

&bullet; If you copy multiple terms from another document, and those terms are on separate lines (such as in an Excel spreadsheet), then when you paste those terms into the search box they will automatically be separated by spaces, which is fine.

&bullet; Ranges may be combined with other ranges, or with single-string searches, for example: 200-210; 214, 220

&bullet; Ranges are only valid if the left number is less than the right number. ("100-105" is valid. "105-100" is not a valid range and will be searched as a regular string.)

&bullet; To search for a multi-word phrase, put it in quotes (for example: "domain containing kinase")

&bullet; If more than one row is returned in the results table, the column headers are clickable links which can be clicked in order to cause the results table to be sorted by that column. Click once on a column to sort the results alphabetically by that column. Click a second time on the same column to sort the results in reverse alphabetical order.